Roskilde Festival is Northern Europe's largest music festival and one of the world's most beloved non-profit events, drawing over 130,000 attendees each summer to the field camps outside Roskilde with all proceeds going to charity. Founded in 1971, it celebrates an eclectic programme of rock, pop, electronic, hip-hop, and world music alongside arts and activism. Copenhagen hotels are the most convenient base for international visitors, with regular trains connecting to the Roskilde festival grounds.
The grandest address in Copenhagen — a 18th-century palace hotel on Kongens Nytorv that has hosted royalty, Tchaikovsky, and Marlene Dietrich. The 90 rooms and suites are decorated with antiques and hand-embroidered fabrics; the Marchal restaurant holds a Michelin star; the spa occupies a vaulted basement. D'Angleterre isn't resting on history — a comprehensive renovation keeps the rooms feeling current while preserving the sense of occasion. This is where you stay when only the very best will do.
Nimb Hotel occupies the Moorish-fantasy Nimb building inside Tivoli Gardens — 17 individually designed rooms and suites where every window looks out over the famous pleasure garden. The scale is deliberately intimate: this is not a hotel for business travel or large groups, but for travelers who want genuine uniqueness and the surreal pleasure of being inside one of Europe's most beloved parks after closing time. The brasserie and bar are excellent, and room service here involves watching Tivoli's illuminations from your own terrace.
The most exciting hotel opening in Copenhagen in a decade — a former Central Post Office converted into a 390-room hotel with a rooftop pool that delivers the best city panorama in Copenhagen. Villa Copenhagen blends heritage architecture (the magnificent postal hall is now the lobby) with a thoroughly contemporary hotel operation. The pool deck overlooking the copper rooftops toward Tivoli and City Hall is the place to be on a summer afternoon. Rates are significantly below d'Angleterre for a comparable design experience.
Skt. Petri occupies a converted department store in the Latin Quarter and brought Copenhagen's design hotel concept to maturity when it opened in 2003 — it remains one of the most consistent performers in the city. The 268 rooms and suites are anchored by a central atrium bar that buzzes most evenings, and the rooftop suite with private terrace is one of the best hotel rooms in Copenhagen. Well-positioned for the National Museum, Strøget shopping, and the canal district.
The best-located hotel in Copenhagen for the iconic Nyhavn experience — occupying two 19th-century warehouses right on the famous canal. The rooms are compact but characterful, with exposed beams and harbour views that justify the location premium. Breakfast in the waterfront restaurant watching canal boats and colourful facades is one of Copenhagen's best hotel moments. A short walk from the Royal Danish Theatre and Kongens Nytorv metro. Book a canal-facing room to get what you came for.
Designed by Arne Jacobsen in 1960 and listed as a UNESCO World Heritage architectural site, the Royal Hotel is the most important design hotel in Scandinavia. The original Room 606 is preserved exactly as Jacobsen designed it — every chair, lamp, and ashtray original — and is available to book. The rest of the hotel has been modernized while preserving its profile. Staying here is an act of architectural pilgrimage as much as a hotel choice, and the Egg Chair in the lobby is the most photographed furniture in Denmark.